Sentences with phrase «phosphorescent paint»

The phrase "phosphorescent paint" refers to a type of paint that glows in the dark after being exposed to light. It can be used to make things easier to see in the dark, like safety signs or glow-in-the-dark stickers. Full definition
Later, he produced «Achromes» of other colorless materials: white cotton wool, fiberglass, rabbit skin, and bread, even experimenting with phosphorescent paint so that the «colours» would change over time.
Additional components include drawings that sequence through the patterning of dance floor lights and a new series of phosphorescent paintings that translate these sequences into a gridded system.
Later, he produced Achromes of other colorless materials: white cotton wool, fiberglass, rabbit skin, and bread, even experimenting with phosphorescent paint so that the «colors» would change over time.
Following this, he used more phosphorescent paint to write the text across the painting, before fixing the dung pendant onto the canvas with a glue gun.
In the Ropac Gallery installation, all electrical lights were removed and the frames were painted with two layers of phosphorescent paint that absorbed light during the day and emitted it at night.
Jacqueline Humphries's «black light» paintings — works that glow with phosphorescent paint — will be on view at the Contemporary Arts Center in New Orleans.
He has placed works in bus stops, on the sides of buildings, and in nightclubs, fabricating them with phosphorescent paint to respond to the lighting and conditions of the location.
He also experimented with phosphorescent paint and cobalt chloride so that the colours would change over time.
Composed of phosphorescent paint that glows under ultraviolet light, and replete with iridescent black dots, he poses with hand on hip, the luminescent properties of the opulent surface emboldening his bursting muscles outlined in chalky blue.
Margrit Lewczuk's new paintings, the Phosphorescent Paintings that make up this exhibition at the Maier Museum of Art in Lynchburg, Virginia, are a trip into an artistic terra incognito; a realm without signposts or guiding historical precedents, literally, a walk in the dark.
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